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Antimicrobial Resistance in Salmonella Isolated from Food Workers and Chicken Products in Japan.

Yoshimasa SasakiHiromi KakizawaYouichi BabaTakeshi ItoYukari HaremakiMasaru YonemichiTetsuya IkedaMakoto KurodaKenji OhyaYukiko Hara-KudoTetsuo AsaiHiroshi Asakura
Published in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Salmonella is an enteric bacterial pathogen that causes foodborne illness in humans. Third-generation cephalosporin (TGC) resistance in Salmonella remains a global concern. Food workers may represent a reservoir of Salmonella , thus potentially contaminating food products. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the prevalence of Salmonella in food workers and characterize the isolates by serotyping and antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Salmonella was isolated from 583 (0.079%) of 740,635 stool samples collected from food workers between January and December 2018, and then serotyped into 76 Salmonella enterica serovars and 22 untypeable Salmonella strains. High rates of antimicrobial resistance were observed for streptomycin (51.1%), tetracycline (33.1%), and kanamycin (18.4%). Although isolates were susceptible to ciprofloxacin, 12 (2.1%) strains (one S . Infantis, one S . Manhattan, two S . Bareilly, two S . Blockley, two S . Heidelberg, two S . Minnesota, one S . Goldcoast, and one untypeable Salmonella strain) were resistant to the TGC cefotaxime, all of which harbored β-lactamase genes ( bla CMY-2 , bla CTX-M-15 , bla CTX-M-55 , and bla TEM-52B ). Moreover, 1.3% (4/309) of Salmonella strains (three S . Infantis and one S . Manhattan strains) isolated from chicken products were resistant to cefotaxime and harbored bla CMY-2 or bla TEM-52B . Thus, food workers may acquire TGC-resistant Salmonella after the ingestion of contaminated chicken products and further contaminate food products.
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